Music History Monday: The Sony Walkman: A Triumph and a Tragedy!

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 18 сен 2024
  • The original Sony Walkman, model TPS-L2
    We mark the introduction on July 1, 1979 - 45 years ago today - of the Sony Walkman. The Walkman was the first entirely portable, high-fidelity (or at least fairly high-fidelity) audio cassette player, a revolutionary device that allowed a user to listen to entire albums anywhere, anytime. Introduced initially in Japan, the higher-ups at Sony expected to sell 5000 units a month for the first six months after its release. Instead, they sold 30,000 units in the first month alone and then - then - sales exploded. All told, Sony has sold over 400 million Walkmen (“Walkmans”?) in cassette, CD, mini-disc, and digital file versions, and Sony remained the market leader among portable music players until the introduction of Apple’s iPod on October 23, 2001.
    For Sony the Walkman was a commercial triumph. For consumers, it was a technological game-changer. But for humanity, taken as widely as we please, it can (and will!) be argued that the “portable music player” - or PMP - has been an unmitigated disaster, a tragedy that has served to increasingly isolate human beings from one another in a manner unique in our history.
    A Walkman ad from 1979, inadvertently promoting individual isolation and the death of public interaction
    Headphones and Earbuds
    Growing up, my maternal grandparents lived in a pre-War apartment building at 82nd and Riverside Drive in Manhattan’s Upper West Side. Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts (or just Lincoln Center) was just 16 blocks to the south, a 16.3-acre complex between 66th and 62nd Streets. Lincoln Center’s Library & Museum of the Performing Arts opened in 1965, and I remember my grandmother taking me and my brother Steve down to see it. Actually, I don’t just “remember” the visit; it is etched forever in my 11-year-old memory because of what happened there.
    There was a large, open area filled with small, circular tables on which were built in record turntables. As I recall, each of these circular tables had four stereo headphones plugged in around the turntable. One would go up to a counter, request a particular record, and then sit down and listen to it through the headphones.
    I had never listened to music through over-the-ear headphones (stereo or otherwise) before that visit, and I still remember the amazement I felt: I’d never, ever experienced such sonic fidelity; I’d never imagined that recorded music could sound so fantastic. And because I was listening through over-the-ear headphones, most of the ambient noise in the room was blocked out, effectively isolating me and allowing me to focus strictly on the music. I don’t remember what my grandmother did to drag me away from that turntable, whether she used a leather sap, a fire hose, the jaws-of-life or, more likely, the promise of ice cream on the way back to her apartment. Whatever; because of those stereo headphones, I had experienced musical high-fidelity for the first time in my life, and I was hooked.
    To this day, I have a number of excellent over-the-ear headphones, and when I really must “listen” for recorded detail, I will listen through one of them. (FYI: I will not use earbuds, as I can’t tolerate the sensation of something shoved into my ear canal. Too bad for me.)
    To the point. The immersive experience provided by headphones - by broadcasting directly into our ears while isolating us from ambient sound - is seductive. But at what point might the isolating aspect of the headphone/earbud experience become a less-than-positive thing? The advent of PMPs - be they Walkmen, iPods, or smartphones - has allowed two generations of listeners to isolate themselves from the world around them, often to the point of near total disengagement. …
    Continue reading, and listen without interruption, only on Patreon! ( / 107235766 )
    Continue on Patreon ( / 107235766 )
    Become a Patron! (www.patreon.co...)
    Listen and Subscribe to the Music History Monday Podcast
    The Robert Greenberg Best Sellers
    Best selling products


    The post Music History Monday: The Sony Walkman: A Triumph and a Tragedy! (robertgreenber...) first appeared on Robert Greenberg (robertgreenber...) .
  • ВидеоклипыВидеоклипы

Комментарии • 1

  • @qwamiade
    @qwamiade 4 дня назад

    ☝🏾 Firrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrst 🏁